by Toby Olson
In the prologue to his introduction of Rochelle Owens on December 7th, Fred Bauman welcomed us all to Chumley's first annual Pearl Harbor Day reading. The suggested metaphor has possibilities. The poems in I Am The Babe Of Joseph Stalin's Daughter, product of the years 1961-1971, do often gain much of their force through effects comparable to sneak attack. The attack is best seen as directed against reader sensibility. No matter how often these poems are read, it is impossible to become comfortable with Rochelle Owens' ability to assault with the inappropriate. Here is a quotation from "Song of the Loving Father of the Stuffed Son."
my son is nervous so/
let him bomb my competitors
let him fuck god's sake
find peace/
my son is hi/
strung let him break a win
dow let him break/
the capitalist head/s off
i'm a capitalist my son the
marxist the bomber said so/
i paid thru the nose for his
anal/ysis his electroly/sis
i love my son/
so
so he's getting better i'm
pay/ing for it/ he's so full
of shit/ my son
i love
my son
so/ ...
The grating nature of the inappropriate here is caused by the dangerous
sense of hysteria felt in the persona of the Jewish father. I intend the
dictionary sense of hysteria: an uncontrollable outburst of emotion or
fear, often characterized by irrationality, laughter, weeping, etc.
Hysteria is intimidating, inappropriate behavior; there are things the
father should not say; we fear he will go too far, will 'go to pieces.'
What controls the hysteria is the voice and structure of the poem.
"Anal/ysis" controls it. The poet's controlling presence is seen in the
artfulness of the scatological hint in ". . . let him break a win / dow. . .
." But these are as well instances of the father's hysterical 'nervousness.'
To borrow a phrase, the freakish precipitate threatens to come to the
top. A continually interesting product of Rochelle Owens' use of
hysteria is that her personae have fuzzy edges; they constantly threaten
to explode out of character. This leaves us in the hands of the poet,
whose voice also, threatening hysterical, inappropriate statement, causes
discomfort in us. The word 'grating' at the beginning of this paragraph
should be taken in a specific sense. It is the sound the two ends of a
broken bone make when an arm is manipulated to set a simple fracture.
It is an inappropriate, physically cathartic sound. A friend once mentioned to me that it was only upon hearing Rochelle Owens read her poetry aloud for the first time that he was able to locate the controlling element in it. That element was her voice. It is true that Rochelle Owens' poetry is oral; it is also true, it seems to me, that she is very skillful in writing her poems so as to indicate that quality of voice through form. Check the following.
Why call an anti-missile
Nike-Zeus
why not Flaming-Jesus
or Red-Eye Moses
We are a Judeo-Christian
CiViLiZaTiOn
are we not?
why the hang-up
on ancient Hellenic
Gods!
What is it with
us!
What's wrong with calling
a bomb
St. Mary or
Big-Joel
what's wrong with
Jewish names
or Christian Ones!
Are the weapons so brilliant & ruddy
like cocks ...
Here there is no persona, no constructed receptacle for us to observe
losing control. But the poem has, perhaps, even a more electric edge
than that experienced when reading "Song of the Loving Father of the
Stuffed Son." It is the voice itself that serves the hysterical function;
"why not Flaming-Jesus / or Red-Eye Moses" are evidence of rage, but
"CiViLiZaTiOn" as well as the form of the exclamations are rage
behavior. In I Am The Babe Of Joseph Stalin's Daughter
the distinction between the poems that rely on personae and those
that don't is pretty clear. Near the end of that collection, however, in
the "Bernard Fruchtman in Town & Country" series, the poetry suggests
a fusion of those two modes: "I have suppressed / Bernard Fruchtman a
long time / & now he leaps out ... ;" these poems are a suggestion of
what is to come. The poems that Rochelle Owens read at Chumley's that afternoon were selected from newer work. The "Book of King Lugalannemundu" follows "The Joe 82 Creation Poems" in the Joe Chronicles Series. At this writing The Joe 82 Creation Poems have just appeared from Black Sparrow Press, They are a long and rich series of genesis poems ending with a section called "Basic Information," a series of 'father' poems that gives ample expression to Rochelle Owens' lyrical ability. To come directly to it, what happens in the Creation Poems is that the voice of persona and poet becomes indistinguishable. This had happened on occasion earher -- the "Bernard Fruchtman" series, etc. -- but here it is totally pervasive and in some ways different in kind. The sense of the use of impropriety mentioned earlier is generally missing from these poems: because they are generally mythic in nature and they tend to avoid specific contemporary invective. Their personae are archetypal figures, and that in itself allows Rochelle Owens to meld her voice more thoroughly with theirs. But the force of hysteria, though it is located differently here, is still a central force. The two characters of the Creation Poems are WildWoman and Wild-Man, both, like Trickster, moving through various experiences in the direction of self knowledge and integration. Their hysteria (again: uncontrollable outbursts of emotion or fear, irrationality, laughter, weeping, etc.) is essential, literally part of the delineation of who these characters are. What has happened is that Rochelle Owens has relocated the hysteria, once a tool of irony and assault, as a central element of the poems' voice. This is what gets us to the Atomic Bomb.
I Am The Charged Observer
said good King Lugalannemundu
the drama of my
dance is-
My love.
The emphasis rests on 'Charged;' the good King, not unlike the
mushroom cloud, is product and container of what is observed. The
poems have moved again to a context in which the persona is a possible
contemporary; Lugalannemundu is closer to Bernard Fruchtman and the
hysterical, Jewish father than he is to Wild-Man. But Rochelle Owens
has entered Lugalannemundu completely, and she has brought Wild-
Man and Wild-Woman with her. What the poems abandon of the
mythic history of the Creation Poems is replaced by a return
to the more frightening (contemporary) hysteria of I Am, The Babe
Of Joseph Stalin's Daughter. And ". . . the multitudinous levels of
human experience and the totality of the world," as experienced by a
consciousness, have been brought into the poems also. Among the
many results of this fusion is a variety of tone in voice that has
expanded the parameters of hysteria. From the perspective of variations
in tone of voice, a glance back at "Song of the Loving Father of the
Stuffed Son" gives plenty of evidence of the seeds of the power that
Rochelle Owens has come to develop. The voice of the father is
lyrical, 'nervous', loving, raging, inappropriate, conciliatory, resentful,
etc. But look at the range of voice in the following, a typical piece
from the "Book of King Lugalannemundu."
what the Deuce do i
Care about convention? every-
thing I See is unConventional your
words are like a fish-market I buy it all/
everything i Like & it's so cheap
there's plentitude
all around
My God
I Seem to Show
So much affection for the whole
worlde
Don't Be Pessimistic Suffer
Fools gladly!
mutton rhymes with button
/I like to pet
dogs
they are Never incorrect They go wild
when they See a King/
Do you Have
a preference for a Certain Kind of Talk?
a criminal
Swinging Walk a dark metal
Shiny Smile a diamond
of a true
Love/ perhaps a pick-pocket who Sees thru
you your Snaky Corruption your Music/
a noisy fight a
continuous series of Something
other than it appears to be a Release
From a Vow a Kiss in the
Afternoon/
Why Not? it's Not square
My Songs buzz loudly
I'm wide-awake
I'll Never turn ya down
I'm Shrewd for you You're alluring
like Dark Run
i drank in Guyana /
I got a lota Nerve for you.
I'm sharp as a
Shark
a Sweet heartbreaker
faythful.
That was one of the poems Rochelle Owens read at Chumley's on Pearl
Harbor Day. It was a pleasant Saturday afternoon. The crowd was
large and responsive. The tables at Chumley's are carved with initials
and forms; it was hard to take notes. Looking at the table to see what
was wrong while listening to Rochelle Owens' voice reminded me of
Nathaniel West's Miss Lonelyhearts; he was trying, in his dream, to fit
all the objects in the world into some recognizable, controlled figure.
There were too many objects, more coming all the time, and Miss
Lonelyhearts couldn't do it. What Rochelle Owens has attempted is
similar to that; the difference is that she has been successful.
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Copyright © 1975 and 1996 by Toby Olson.
Light and Dust Mobile Anthology of Poetry.